A: The beer is slightly hazy light copper in color and has a light amount of visible carbonation. It poured with a thin off white head that quickly died down and left lacing.S: There are light aromas of biscuit and caramel malts in the nose.T: Like the smell, the initial taste is rather malty with flavors of caramel and some associated sweetness; however a mild to moderate amount of bitterness develops towards the finish.M: It feels medium-bodied on the palate and has a moderate amount of carbonation.O: The beer is very easy to drink because the taste has a good balance between the malts and hops.

This pours a nice dark, hazy orange with a chunky head. There is decent lacing and retention as well. The smell is more potent than I was expecting for a pale ale. The citrus and hops are obvious, as well as the malts and sweetness. This has a very well rounded hop/malt complexity. Before it dawned on me what the name meant, I was thinking to myself that just about when you expect this beer to bring that sweet malt flavor through in the aftertaste, it truly does finish bitter.

On tap at Remy's Fenway before the Sox/Cubs game on Sunday. Served in a standard pint glass. Nice golden sunshine colored body. Moderate carbonation, and a little lacing. Smell had a nice honey and malt aroma. Taste was very appealing. Very mild taste of fruit, like apples and grapes, balanced well with just enough malt in the back. Surprisingly though, not a lot of hops present here. Would have categorized this as more of a golden ale. Still, very smooth on the palate and quite drinkable. This may be my new drink of choice near Fenway, replacing GI Honkers Ale as my pre-game libation.

Served on-cask from beer engine into a clear imperial pint glass at Clark Street Ale House (Chicago, IL).

A: Burnished amber with tightly bubbled, 1-2 finger maple-wood colored head with great retention and nice caking of lace down the imperial.

S: Citrus and pine sap are understated but present, and the maltiness is strikingly nicely complementary with a nice kick of toffee-caramel and some biscuity elements.

T: A really nicely drinkable pale ale which, but for the slight citrus components could go for an English IPA on cask like this. The citrus and pine meet more herbal, grassy flavors and the maltiness again brings wonderful balance with nice toffee, caramel, and a little crackery-biscuit to the mix.

M: The cask delivery is a great way to give this brew a whirl -- smooth and layering on the palate with a nice crispness despite the low carbonation.

O: A real highlight of the night, a surprising pale ale which packs a lot of complexity and a brew I would try again on cask given the chance.

i grabbed this one in a trade an cracked it open to mess around on the grill. served cold and poured into a pint glass,

nice golden yellow pour with a huge amount of carbonation that was streaming up from the bottom of the glass and reached the top to form a huge head of white that towered over the rest of the glass.

aroma is light herbal hops, lots of wheat and grain, hints of grassy notes and herbals that blend with a light spiced rye note and a really well done light floral finish. perfectly drinkable this was simply an amazing pale to drink on the first 85 degree day. long finish of light hops and grains that rolls through slightly dry but clean and crisp.

overall an amazing choice that i was so happy that i made. i was just immensly impressed with this beer.

Not your run of the mill APA, as the look would suggest. Orange/copper body, with a thin cream colored head to cap it off. Strong smells of cascade hops and some caramel malt. Nice and bitter, all the way through. Very grapefruit reminiscent with a fair malt backbone. Nice and strong on the flavor with as full body as you can ask for from a pale ale.

I love the random fridge-pullings. This one pours a clear sunrise amber topped by a relatively short-lived finger of lightly dirty foam. The nose comprises orange peel, light lemon zest, flowers, light greens, and a pinch or so of light coriander. The taste holds notes of bitter orange rind, light caramel, light buttery biscuit, and what seems like some peppery rye bread in there as well. The body is a light medium, with a light moderate carbonation and a kinda dry finish. Overall, a nice pale, nothing truly special, but a nice beer to just sit back and enjoy without pretense. Something like that.

Had some odd metallica flavors going on in it. I was kind of turned off by this. Some beers have this happen and I try to look passed it. Sometimes it's easier said than done. The beer is a good APA overall. It's got a good color and aroma to it. The hoppy quality isn't too bad either. Just that metallica flavor I was getting killed this one for me.

Pours a clear orangish amber color with a white two finger head which gives way to okay lacing. The aroma is of breadiness and a nice big pine hop smell. The flavor has a bread malt backbone with a nice pine hop flavor and bite at the end. Not overly bitter, but a nice smooth bite also a hint of fruit. The mouthfeel is moderately carbonated. Overall it is a solid beer, enough flavor to make you want more, but an easy drink as well.

Smell: Kind of one note. Fortunately, that one note consists of strong, fresh pine hops. It seems this beer only can do one thing, but it does it well.

Taste/Mouthfeel: Excellent mouthfeel and flavor. Initially I get some active bubbly carbonation that turns smooth and velvety at the end. This mouthfeel does well in complimented the bitterness of the pine hops that definitely dominates the flavor.

Drinkability: I would rate this higher but this level of hops might be hard to keep up with.

Nice look, very pleasing to the nose with malty grains and mellow pine. very smooth and clean drinking APA...a great regional variation, though not too bitter as the name implies. the bitterness does show way back on the finish. fairly subtle, but not to say weak. I dig this...sessions!

Pours dark golden with a fairly grainy looking head. Smells quite bready, with a touch of fruit and earthy hops. Tastes very grainy, and a bit thin with some slightly watered down fruit and grain. Fairly smooth, but ultimately fairly uninteresting and not really crisp enough for a pale ale for my taste.

Very full with thick head. It has a nice, expected aroma for a pale ale and the taste lingers and is deeper than expected. It goes down very easily and, in my opinion, is a great beer to drink every day and to share with people who don't really appreciate beer. Actually, this may be a great introductory beer for these people!!

Deep reddish copper color. Good amount of sediment on bottom of glass. Thin white head, larger bubbled ring on edge of glass. Awesome lacing. Dark floral aroma. Hops almost dominated my maltiness in aroma. Wasn't expecting that much malt in aroma for an APA but both blend nicely for a very pleasant aroma, hop aroma becomes the more dominant as beer warms. High Carbonation, last throughout whole glass, a swirl or two at any time brings back a thick white 1/4" head. Again malt very present in flavor, more evident and heavy at end of drink, with a dry floral hop finish. Sweeter maltiness in middle of drinks, starts with a dark orangy grassiness. Bitter finish lives up to the name but definitely no where close to unbearable, quite nice.

Pours golden with a white head. The nose brings some earthy spice and a bit of some herbal characteristics. Really light grain and a bit of caramel. The taste is slightly bitter with some floral and earthy characteristics. Light and slightly dry with good carbonation. Drinks quite well, although not as sessionable as it could be.

A - Brassy, clear color with some carbonation bubbles trailing off the glass. A moderate-to-light head which quickly degrades into an irregular thin head, with light lacing that falls with the level of the beer as you drink.

S - Nice hoppy aroma, fruity with a good amount of citrus up front. Not a lot of malt in the profile.

T - Great balanced bitter flavor, with a slight sweetness naar the end, quickly fades back into a lasting enjoyable bitterness.

M - Not really anything memorable here, just average mouthfeel that leaves quickly.

D - Pretty drinkable, like most of the Two Brothers line, I could definitely knock a few of these back.

All in all a fulfilling pale ale with nothing fancy about it (that's a good thing in this case). Keep it up, Ebels.